Fanghur Posted September 25, 2011 Posted September 25, 2011 In the review section of my textbook (not for marks, don't worry. In my class marks come only from the midterm and final exam) there's a question which I'm not entirely sure how to calculate; namely because it sounds like a trick question. The first part was fairly easy: If someone with the genotype aa mates with someone with a genotype that's 0.5 Aa/0.5 AA, what is the probability that their first child will be affected (i.e. have the genotype aa). (This question is about a rare autosomal recessive allele). This is the calculation (I think): P(aa) = 0.5Aa x 1.0aa x 0.5(aa) = 0.25 aa. But the next part is what has me a little bit confused, because it asks what the probability that their first child would be phenotypically normal (i.e. Aa or AA). Now, logically I would think that since there's a 25% chance of their first child being affected, then by definition there would be a 75% chance of them being unaffected. Am I missing something here? Because it really sounds like it's some sort of trick question.
Ringer Posted September 25, 2011 Posted September 25, 2011 Just seems like you may be over thinking it. Probability wise the probability of A plus the probability of not A is 1. So if there is a .25 probability there is a .75 probability of anything else.
jorden Posted September 28, 2011 Posted September 28, 2011 Your right. Your formula.was different. I simplified it using the square. You have 8 total solutions. 6 are Aa and 2 are aa. Make fractions and reduce. 75% Aa and 25% aa. So yes your right. Not really a trick question as it is throwing in another genotype to make you think about it. You can't over think in science or you end up with huge marginal errors.
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